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Events & Training
March
9th Peak Performance Buoyancy
13th Discover Scuba
16th Drysuit & Open Water
20th EFR
Classes
Please call for prices and if there is a class you would like to take that you don't see please call us!
| Refresher Courses |
Length of Course |
Description |
| Scuba Tune-up |
2 Hours |
Been awhile? – First you go over scuba knowledge you learned during your initial training. Then, practice fundamental skills in a pool or a confined water area. Now you are tuned for that next underwater adventure! |
| Beginner Courses |
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| Discover Scuba Diving |
2 Hours |
Our PADI Discover Scuba Diving experience is a simple and fun way to try out scuba diving in a safe and controlled setting and to introduce you to the underwater world. One of our highly trained professionals will guide you through a bit of the basic information you need to understand and will teach you a few skills that you need to know, then take you for a dive. Usually done in a local swimming pool, this program starts out in the shallow end and then, if you want to, takes you into deeper water. It’s a great family activity available to kids as young as ten, with something similar available to kids as young as eight. It can be done in as little as an hour and includes everything that you will need except a bathing suit and towel. We can even conduct the Discover program in your own pool! |
| Open Water Diver |
Varies |
The PADI Open Water Diver course is the world’s most popular scuba course, and has introduced millions of people to the adventurous diving lifestyle |
| Advanced Courses |
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| Advanced Open Water |
5 Dives |
The Advanced Open Water Diver course helps you increase your confidence and build your scuba skills so you can become more comfortable in the water. This course builds on what you’ve learned and develops new capabilities by introducing you to new activities and new ways to have fun scuba diving. |
| Rescue Diver |
2 Dive Days |
“Challenging” and “rewarding” best describe the PADI Rescue Diver course. Building upon what you’ve already learned, this course expands on what you already know about how to prevent problems, and how to manage them if they |
| Emergency First Response |
6 Hours |
CPR and First Aid: Emergency First Response Primary and Secondary Care. First aid and CPR are good skills for anyone involved in adventure sports – just in case. And, you need these skills for the PADI Rescue Diver course. |
| Emergency Oxygen Provider |
2 Hours |
Breathe easy—knowing that you know how to recognize illnesses treatable by emergency oxygen. Being the best buddy you can be means being prepared – especially in a time of need. |
| Dive Master |
Varies |
GO PRO - Working closely with a PADI Instructor, in this program you expand your dive knowledge and hone your skills to the professional level. PADI Divemaster training develops your leadership abilities, qualifying you to supervise dive activities and assist instructors with student divers. |
| Master Scuba Diver Rating |
Varies |
With the PADI Master Scuba Diver rating, you have reached the highest non professional level in the PADI System of diver education. It means that you have acquired significant training and experience in a variety of dive environments. |
| Speciality Diver |
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| Enriched Air Diver |
3 Hours |
The PADI Enriched Air Diver course is PADI’s most popular specialty scuba diving course, and it’s easy to see why. Scuba diving with enriched air nitrox gives you more no decompression dive time. This means more time underwater, especially on repetitive scuba dives. |
| Peak Performance Buoyancy |
2 Dives |
Divers who’ve mastered the highest performance levels in buoyancy stand apart. You’ve seen them underwater. They glide effortlessly, use less air and ascend, descend or hover, almost as if by thought. They interact gently with aquatic life and affect their surroundings minimally. |
| Boat Diver |
2 Dives |
Whether you’ve never made a boat dive or you’ve logged dozens, the PADI Boat Diver Specialty course can benefit almost every diver because different boats in different parts of the world do things differently. |
| Dry Suit Diver |
3 Dives |
Wanna stay warm and toasty on a dive? Then dive dry. Yes! Unlike a wetsuit, a dry suit seals you off from the outside water and that keeps you warm! Even in surprisingly cold water. There is no “Dive Season” When you are Dry suit certified! |
| Deep Diver |
4 Dives |
After your first few scuba dives, you soon want to explore a bit deeper. There’s something exciting and mysterious about the depth that attracts dives. Techniques for diving in the deeper range of 18-40 metres/ 60-130 feet
Deep scuba diving equipment considerations |
| Wreck Diver |
4 Dives |
Whether sunk on purpose as an artificial reef or the result of mishap, wrecks open fascinating windows to the past. Most divers find wrecked ships, airplanes and even automobiles nearly irresistible because they’re intriguing to explore, exciting avenues of discovery, and usually teeming with aquatic life. The PADI Wreck Diver course teaches you the ins and outs of rewarding, responsible wreck diving. |
| Night Diver |
3 Dives |
As the sun sets, you don your dive gear, slip on your scuba mask and bite down on your dive regulator. A deep breath and you step off the boat – into the underwater night. Although you’ve seen this reef many times before, this time you drop into a whole new world and watch it come to life under the glow of your dive light. |
| Equipment Specialist |
6 Hours |
As a PADI Equipment Specialist, you are prepared for the basic scuba equipment maintenance, care and adjustments you'll encounter every day. In addition, you'll learn interesting background information about how your gear works, how it’s repair and other information that helps you with your equipment investment. |
| Drift Diver |
2 Dives |
The PADI Drift Diver Specialty course introduces you to the coolest magic carpet ride you’ll ever experience. This course shows you how to enjoy rivers and ocean currents by “going with the flow,” staying with your dive partner, communicating with the dive boat and knowing where you are the whole time. |
| Altitude Diver |
2 Dives |
Any time you’re diving at 300 to 3000 metres/1000 to 10,000 feet above sea level, you're altitude diving. If you want to explore the hidden world of a mountain lake, the PADI Altitude Diver Specialty course is for you. |
| Cavern Diver |
4 Dives |
This is a challenging and very exciting course that includes four training dives over at least two days. During your first open water dive you'll practice line handling, reel use and emergency procedures without entering a cavern. But, for your next three dives, you're headed into the cavern, staying within the light zone and 40 metres/130 feet total distance from the surface. |
| Multilevel Diver |
2 Dives |
In this course, you learn how to plan dives that extend your bottom time by crediting you for slower nitrogen absorption when you ascend to a shallower depth. That’s the way you really dive, after all. You'll learn what multilevel diving is and why you want to plan for multilevel dives. You'll also get to see the various types of multilevel dive calculators (including dive computers), as well as learn about multilevel dive planning, organization, procedures, techniques, and potential problems. You'll plan a multilevel dive profile and dive it with your PADI Instructor. |
| Search and Recover Diver |
4 Dives |
Have you ever dropped something in the water? Are you looking for lost “treasure”? The PADI Search and Recovery Diver Specialty course will teach you effective ways to find objects underwater and bring them to the surface. Small, large or just awkward, there is a way to bring them up. |
| Digital Underwater Photographer |
2 Dives |
Underwater photography is one of the most popular diving specialties, and the rise of digital underwater photography has made it easier and more fun than ever. This is why there are actually two PADI underwater photography courses. The PADI Digital Underwater Photographer course gets you going quickly with today modern digital equipment, whether you use a point-and-shoot snap camera or a sophisticated D-SLR like the pros. The PADI Underwater Photographer course is a more traditional photography course designed for conventional film equipment. |
| Diver Propulsion Vehicle Diver |
2 Dives |
DPVs offer a thrilling way to see a lot of underwater territory in a brief amount of time. They scoot you through the water without kicking. Whether making a shore dive or diving from a boat, a DPV is a great way to see more and have a blast doing it. |
| Underwater Videographer |
3 Dives |
The PADI Underwater Videographer Specialty course shows you how to create videos that are interesting, entertaining and worth watching again and again. |
| AWARE Fish ID |
12 Hours |
Have you ever been scuba diving and asked yourself, "What was that?” The PADI Project AWARE Fish Identification Specialty course provides you with the fish identification basics so that next time, you know the answer. |
| National Geographic Diver |
2 Dives |
Join an elite group of divers who are more than tourists, but explorers, adventurers and conservationists. The fun part about the PADI National Geographic Diver certification is the opportunity to participate in an exploration project. You'll learn to observe and explore like an underwater scientist. |
| Underwater Naturalist |
2 Dives |
Look closer to see more on your next dive. Look for symbioses, predator/prey and other relationships between aquatic plant and animal life. Learn not just what fish and animals are, but how they interact with each other and the environment. |
| Professional Diver |
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| PADI IDC |
Varies |
Are you looking for something extraordinary? To do something others can only dream of? To help people transform their lives? To open doors you didn’t even know existed? All of this, and more, awaits you as a PADI Open Water Scuba Instructor. |
| PADI AI |
Varies |
As a PADI Assistant Instructor, you not only gain additional experience as a PADI Professional scuba diver, but you also start learning the PADI System of diver education. You can act as an instructional scuba assistant and assume limited teaching responsibilities. It’s a great way to gain experience in order to become a scuba instructor! |
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